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As tensions over trade, Taiwan, technology, and global influence intensify, the meeting between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping may determine the future balance of power between Washington and Beijing. By Dr. Pshtiwan Faraj | Sulaimani, Iraq | 13 May 2026 — Kurdish Policy Analysis "We don't have permanent allies and we don't have permanent enemies, only our interests are permanent, and we have to follow them." – Henry John Temple. The root of the current Strait of Hormuz tensions is not only about shipping routes or oil prices, but also about the final collapse of the historical US concept towards Beijing. However, the 2025 National Security Strategy, released by the White House in November, says this was a historic mistake because China used the assets it accumulated to strengthen itself and compete with the West, not to become their partner. For many years, the United States alone maintained maritime security; The fifth US ship in Manama, Bahrain, worked only to keep o...

Iraq’s Kurdish Presidency Test: PUK and KDP Warn Against Breaking Political “Customs” Ahead of Critical Vote

As Iraq heads toward the April 2026 presidential election, Kurdish divisions and cross-sectarian maneuvering risk reshaping a 20-year informal power-sharing tradition. 

Dr. Pshtiwan FarajSulaimani, Iraq, April 10, 2026

 — Iraq’s fragile power-sharing system is under renewed strain ahead of the presidential election scheduled for April 11, as Kurdish divisions threaten to disrupt an informal political tradition that has shaped governance since 2003. Ahead of Iraq’s 2026 presidential vote, Kurdish parties PUK and KDP face internal divisions as analysts warn that bypassing political customs in Iraq’s power-sharing system could reshape future governance.

Political leaders from the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) have repeatedly emphasized the importance of preserving internal consensus over the Kurdish presidency nomination, warning that fragmentation could weaken the Kurdish position in Baghdad.

Since the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003, Iraq’s political system has operated on an unwritten ethno-sectarian arrangement: the prime minister is typically Shiite, the parliament speaker Sunni Arab, and the presidency held by a Kurd. While not constitutionally mandated, the arrangement has become a cornerstone of political stability.

Analysts say the system has survived repeated crises not only because of sectarian distribution of top offices, but due to an informal principle: each community selects its own leadership internally before presenting a unified candidate to Baghdad.

“This internal consensus has been more important than the formal power-sharing formula itself,” a Kurdish political observer said.

However, the system has been tested repeatedly. In several parliamentary cycles, Shiite blocs have delayed government formation due to internal disagreements over the prime ministerial nominee. During those periods, Kurdish and Sunni factions avoided intervening in selecting candidates outside Shiite consensus.

Similarly, Sunni political fragmentation has at times delayed the appointment of a parliament speaker. In the most recent example, following the removal of parliament speaker Mohammed al-Halbousi in November 2023, Sunni factions required nearly a year of internal negotiations before agreeing on a replacement, ultimately electing a new speaker in late 2024.

Despite repeated deadlocks, rival blocs have traditionally refrained from bypassing internal community consensus by imposing external candidates.

That norm, however, has been increasingly questioned.

Within Kurdish politics, divisions between the KDP and PUK have periodically weakened their ability to present a unified front in Baghdad. In 2018, internal disagreements within the PUK over a presidential nominee coincided with competing negotiations involving Shiite leaders, including Nouri al-Maliki and Muqtada al-Sadr.

At the time, rival Kurdish figures entered separate negotiations with Shiite blocs, ultimately leading to a split Kurdish slate in parliament. The presidency was eventually secured by Barham Salih, though analysts say the episode weakened Kurdish bargaining unity.

In 2022, a similar dynamic contributed to the election of Latif Rashid after Kurdish factions again failed to agree on a single candidate.

Now, with more than 15 candidates reportedly competing for the presidency ahead of the April 11, 2026 vote, Kurdish political observers warn the absence of a unified position could once again allow cross-sectarian bargaining to determine the outcome.

“If the Kurds fail to agree on one candidate, the presidency risks becoming a bargaining chip between Baghdad’s major blocs rather than a guaranteed Kurdish post,” a political analyst in Sulaimani said.

The KDP and PUK have both called for internal agreement before entering parliamentary negotiations, arguing that Kurdish political strength depends on unity rather than external alliances.

Analysts caution that continued fragmentation could normalize a precedent in which Kurdish positions are decided outside Kurdish consensus—potentially weakening the informal power-sharing balance or the Muhasasa system that has governed Iraq for over two decades.

“Once that custom is broken, it becomes difficult to restore,” the Kurdish observer said. “And it would not only affect the presidency, but the entire logic of Iraq’s political balance.”

As Iraq approaches another critical vote, the outcome may hinge less on formal voting arithmetic and more on whether Kurdish parties can preserve the internal consensus that has long underpinned their role in Baghdad.

#Iraq #Kurdistan #PUK #KDP #IraqPolitics #MiddleEast #Elections2026 #PoliticalCrisis

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